Timothy Dyck

About

Timothy Dyck is a Senior Analyst with eWEEK Labs. He has been testing and reviewing application server, database and middleware products and technologies for eWEEK since 1996. Prior to joining eWEEK, he worked at the LAN and WAN network operations center for a large telecommunications firm, in operating systems and development tools technical marketing for a large software company and in the IT department at a government agency. He has an honors bachelors degree of mathematics in computer science from the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, and a masters of arts degree in journalism from the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, Canada.

Database Race Is on to Scale Up

In the database world, as in many other areas of IT, companies are searching for ways to do more with less. This challenge is being approached from different directions by the three top database vendors. Oracle Corp. is focusing on clustering and adding nontraditional database services such as file serving to its database to lower […]

DB2 7.2 Smoothes Data Integration Bumps

Along with some fine-tuning around the edges, IBMs DB2 Universal Database 7.2 unfurls several areas of new or enhanced connectivity that make it easier to connect DB2 to other enterprise data sources. In particular, DB2s newfound ability to send and receive messages with IBM MQSeries, the widely used message queuing server, will be interesting to […]

Tux: Built for Speed

In most cases, a public benchmark is really nothing more than a transaction race where bragging rights and platform pride are the prizes. But every so often, a revolutionary performance breakthrough comes to the forefront during a test. In the case of eWeek Labs Web server benchmark, Red Hat Inc.s Tux 2.0 Web server running […]

Old Boxes Pose Hazard

HARDWARE DISPOSAL Ill bet most of us have nasty little secrets buried in forgotten corners of our buildings—rooms full of hardware junk just like this one at eWeeks Boston-area lab. The IT industry has to take a much greater collective responsibility for its trash. Its not just filling up landfills; it can also be quite […]

Free IBM Tools Feature SOAP

WEB DEVELOPMENT The updated version of IBMs free Web Services Toolkit, released last month, provides tools for Web developers to experiment with the latest Web and XML application development technologies. IBM (along with Microsoft) is a big backer of XML Simple Object Access Protocol remote procedure call technology, and SOAP is central to Web Services […]

NetDetector Has Total Recall

SECURITY A product thats just a few months old is providing a way of taking the long view in network security. Niksun Inc. (www.niksun.com) takes a new approach with its Net- Detector by building a network traffic analyzer with intrusion-detection system features. The rack-mountable NetDetectors key difference is that it is designed to be purchased […]

Crackers: Your Help Is Not Wanted Here

Thanks but no thanks. Thats what I say to those anonymous crackers who had decided to “help” out by releasing the Cheese Worm last month. Cheese is certainly a “c00l” hack, but that definitely doesnt make it acceptable or responsible behavior. Visions of bots floating around in the ether waging mighty, but invisible, battles belong […]

Translating XML Schema

Earlier this month at the Tenth International World Wide Web Conference in Hong Kong, XML took its biggest step forward since the document format was first standardized in February 1998. At the conference, the World Wide Web Consortium released XML Schema as a W3C Recommendation, finalizing efforts that started in 1998 to define a standard […]

ColdFusion Makes Speed, Control Gains

Macromedia Inc.s first release of what was Allaire Corp.s ColdFusion Web application server, which will ship early next month, provides some innovative but incremental changes that current ColdFusion developers will welcome. eWeek Labs tested a near-release-candidate build of Macromedia ColdFusion 5. Virtually all the changes we found are administrative updates (such as reporting and monitoring […]

VOIP Phones Multiply at N+I

There is a stealthy upswing in VOIP phones going on this year, raising the likelihood that, in the next few years, youll be able to wire offices with nothing but Ethernet— or, in some cases, no wires at all. Its the combination of voice-over-IP and wireless technology that provides the most incentive to switch. Symbol […]